5 books to read at Easter

Read at Easter

A few days of well-deserved rest are coming for everyone. Perhaps you have a habit of going from street to street seeing steps of different brotherhoods, perhaps you take advantage of the good weather to isolate yourself from everything a little in a paradisiacal beach ... Whatever your choice this week, surely you have the odd hour a day to enjoy reading. For this reason, since Actualidad Literatura We recommend 5 books to read at Easter.

Will you choose any of these? If not and you have your own list of chosen books, we would like to know what your choice was.

We recommend ...

  • "God's crooked lines" de Torcuato Luca from Tena: Alice Gould is admitted to a mental hospital. In her delirium, she believes she is a private investigator in charge of a team of detectives dedicated to clearing up complicated cases. According to a letter from her private doctor, the reality is different: her paranoid obsession is to attempt on her husband's life. The extreme intelligence d e this woman and her apparently normal attitude will confuse doctors to the point of not knowing for sure if Alice has been unjustly admitted or in fact suffers from a serious and dangerous psychological disorder. Score: 8/10.

the-crooked-lines-of-god

  • "Was the?" de Stefan Zweig: In this short novel, Zweig tells us about jealousy with his usual mastery: elusive, with the virtue of unresolved intrigue, he delves into the pain and helplessness produced by feeling substituted in the affections of our loved ones by a third party who At the very least, he has the same rights as us. Anger and violence can lead to revenge that will aggravate, if possible even more, our orphanhood. 76 pages. Score: 8/10.

Was the

  • "The Shadow of the Templar" de Núria Masot: In 1265, the Knights of the Temple, the Pope and a ruthless spy chase a scroll with a powerful secret inside. A secret that could change history. Bernard Guils, a Templar traveling on a ship bound for Barcelona, ​​is poisoned at the end of his journey. Before dying, he tells a Jew that I looked for another templar, Guillem - a disciple of bernard - to hand him some very important papers. The scrolls that Bernard spoke of before his death mysteriously disappear, giving rise to a cleverly interwoven plot of betrayals, hiding places and spies who seek to seize the valuable papers. What mysterious secret do these mysterious scrolls hide? What is the reason that so many people risk their lives to find a wad of paper? The Shadow of the Templar seduces us with its detailed descriptions of the Barcelona of 1265, and intrigues us as it leads us to discover a powerful and surprising secret. Score 8/10.

the shadow of the templar

  • "The weight of the heart" de Rosa Montero: Hired to solve a simple at first glance case, Detective Bruna Husky faces an international corruption scheme that threatens to destabilize the fragile balance between a troubled Earth and the religious dictatorship of the Kingdom of Labari. In a future in which war is supposedly eradicated, Bruna fights against the clock for freedom and in defense of life, while assimilating the contradictory feelings that taking care of a little girl produces. Bruna Husky is an extreme and fascinating heroine; a survivor capable of everything that is torn between fragility and toughness, between self-sufficiency and the desperate need for affection. Score 7/10.

the weight of the heart

  • "Cabaret Biarritz" de Joseph C. Vales: A literary comedy in the effervescent Biarritz of the 20s. Georges Miet writes popular stories for the French publishing house La Fortune, until one day his editor asks him for a "serious" novel about the tragic events that had shocked fifteen years before the vibr against Biarritz in 1925, during the summer season. After a terrible gale, the corpse of a local young woman appears attached to a ring on the pier. Georges Miet moved there and interviewed about thirty people from different social strata who were more or less directly related to the young woman. Through the stories of all of them Miet discovers that the police and the judge wanted to get rid of the case and that the facts were revealed thanks to the investigation that the journalist Paul Villequeau and the photographer Galet then carried out, to which he joined the magnetic and beautiful Beatrix Ross, Villequeau's adolescent love. Score 8/10.

Biarritz Cabaret

We hope you like this selection of books and choose one of them. I personally will re-read myself "God's crooked lines". Happy Easter!


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  1.   Manuela Ramirez said

    The recommendation of the five books to read on HOLY WEEK is not at all accurate. A very special time of spiritual recollection for all Christians in the world and of all ages. I am struck by SPAIN, which supposedly brought Christianity to many countries in ancient times. I heard a Spanish priest say that he has a lot of grief, because Spain is no longer a one hundred percent Catholic Christian and he said it with great regret. We will go to those parts to preach what they preached to US. OKAY! .

    1.    iacobust said

      Manuel, you are mixing things that have nothing to do with Guillen's writing.

    2.    Carmen Guillen said

      Good afternoon Manuela! If you consider that the selection of books is not correct it seems to me correct. There has always been a difference of opinion and from there comes the wealth in terms of tastes and personal differences. But I do tell you: do not forget those who are not Christians, nor those who, even though they are, do not need to see virgins or Christs on their streets to feel more Catholic. They also have the right to read this article. Greetings and happy spiritual recollection.

  2.   Save said

    Manuueeeelaaaaa !!! (What a beautiful soap opera song evokes in me your precious name, madam!) My dear madam, I share with all of you your opinion about what Holy Week means in the Christian community. Although, in my view, it is not at odds with reading and the pleasure that reading entails. Also reading is a practice that feeds the spirit. How else could Christians have nurtured and praised the marvelous words of the work and faith of our Lord? You have to be in favor of reading, and of good reading even more. In my modest opinion, the recommendation of the author of the article is very correct and suggestive. Thank you all for shining your spotlight on us !! 😉 PS: societies are increasingly secular in their own right. The evolutionary necessity has wanted that by chance (who knows…) it is more accelerated in old Europe. Do not worry that there in your latitudes will also come everything, do not worry. Everything is a matter of faith!